
| Media Assistance:
Tony Fitzpatrick Senior Science Editor tony_fitzpatrick@wustl.edu (314) 935-5272 |
| Director, CMI:
Stuart Solin (solin@wustl.edu)
| Location: 209 Crow Hall
Email: solin@wustl.edu Telephone: (314) 935-9305 |
The Center for Materials Innovation, (CMI) located in the refurbished basement of Crow Hall, will enable collaborators from across campus to make basic and applied advances in materials research, eventually touching many aspects of daily life. New and improved consumer goods, better planes, vehicles, and electronics, and new biomedical products that could lead to better pharmaceuticals and innovative medical devices are among the objectives of this new, interdisciplinary center housed in Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis.
Moreover, the Center brings together researchers, some world-renowned in their fields, to get a better understanding of fundamental processes in nature, such as magnetism, that are the bases for the development of increasingly smaller, more specialized novel materials. Stuart A. Solin, Ph.D., Charles M. Hohenberg Professor of Experimental Physics in Arts & Sciences, is director of the Center for Materials Innovation. William E. Buhro, Ph.D., professor of chemistry in Arts & Sciences, is associate director.
Charter CMI members, who comprised a subcommittee that delved into what was needed to form the center are: Pratim Biswas, Ph.D., Stifel and Quinette Jens Professor of Environmental Engineering Science and Director of Environmental Engineering Science; Donald Elbert, Ph.D., assistant professor of biomedical engineering; Ronald S. Indeck, Ph.D., Das Family Distinguished Professor of Electrical Engineering; Kenneth F. Kelton, Ph.D., professor of physics in Arts & Sciences; and Karen Wooley, Ph.D., professor of chemistry in Arts & Sciences.
The Center initially is funded at more than $10 million from 2003-08. A portion of these funds will be supported by a gift from John F. McDonnell to the University's campaign to endow three new professorships. Two of the professorships will be in Arts & Sciences, the other in Engineering .
| News Stories & Tip Sheets: |
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| Size matters Technique controls nanoparticle size, creates large numbers (http://news-info.wustl.edu/tips/page/normal/10638.html) Dec. 3, 2007 --
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| Cloning agents Software agents now in touch via network sensors (http://news-info.wustl.edu/tips/page/normal/8048.html) Nov. 9, 2006 --
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| Bathing in oxygen Method allows oxygen determination in superconductivity (http://news-info.wustl.edu/tips/page/normal/6718.html) March 1, 2006 --
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| Faculty Experts: |
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| Ronald S. Indeck DAS Family Distinguished Professor of Electrical Engineering (http://news-info.wustl.edu/sb/page/normal/23.html)
Indeck earned his doctorate from the University of Minnesota. His research involves magnetic and optical components and systems, especially in the areas of information technology and security. He is working with extremely high density magnetic recording systems, fast searching of massive databases, ... Expertise: object verification, public surveillance, magnetic information storage systems, magnetism Media assistance: (314) 935-5272 / tony_fitzpatrick@wustl.edu |
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| Pratim Biswas Stifel and Quinette Jens Professor (http://news-info.wustl.edu/sb/page/normal/481.html)
Biswas received his Ph.D. from California Institute of Technology, has published extensively in his field and served on many international organizations and conferences. His research interests include aerosol science and engineering, nanoparticle technology, air quality engineering, combustion, materials ... Expertise: aerosol science, nanoparticle technology, air quality engineering, combustion, material processing for environmental technologies, environmentally benign processing, environmental nanotechnology, … Direct contact: (314) 935-5482 / pratim.biswas@seas.wustl.edu |
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| William Buhro Professor of Chemistry in Arts & Sciences (http://news-info.wustl.edu/sb/page/normal/539.html)
William H. Buhro, Ph.D., professor of chemistry and associate director of the Center for Materials Innovation, specializes in nanotechnology. He and his group are engaged in synthesis on the nanometer-scale. They design reactions and mechanisms for the growth of inorganic crystals having dimensions ... Expertise: nanomaterials, materials, inorganic chemistry, nanotubes, nanowires Direct contact: (314) 935-4269 / buhro@wustl.edu |
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| Kenneth F. Kelton Professor of Physics in Arts & Sciences (http://news-info.wustl.edu/sb/page/normal/487.html) Kenneth Kelton is an expert in a phenomenon called nucleation, which is the most common way that physical systems change from one phase to another and is a governing process in nearly all phase transformations. Kelton has a long history of collaboration with Patrick Gibbons, Ph.D., professor of physics ... Expertise: quasicrystals, metallurgy, nucleation processes, metallic liquids, materials science, materials physics, non-crystaline solids, … Direct contact: (314) 935-6228 / kfk@wuphys.wustl.edu |
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